Wild West Guns Trigger
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Please post political post in the new Politics forum.
Wild West Guns Trigger
I was given a WWG trigger for a Marlin 1895. The rifle most in need of it is a 336 in 35 Rem. I'm sure it'll work, but thought I'd ask to be sure. Has anyone here put them in by themselves. I'm not totally unhandy, but not a gunsmith either. Are they hard to put in? Would you recommend having someone more qualified than a turd kickin cowboy do it? Thanks.
Alright azoil, I tore into this project and I'm having a hard time getting the hammer screw to line up. The action won't close when I get past this point either. It's almost like the follower wont' move, but I'm not sure. The hammer won't thread back in all the way and I don't want to strip the threads or cross thread it. Something just isn't right. Do you have to get the bottom tang/trigger group all the way out when you install this? Is there something there that could cause this? Help please, anyone.
Refer to the following drawing:
http://www.gunuts.com/images/40.jpg
1. With the rifle still assembled, open the action and then remove the finger lever screw (#38 ).
2. Remove the finger lever. (#34)
3. Remove the breech bolt. (#3)
4. Remove the ejector. (#25)
5. Remove the Trigger guard plate support screw (#18 “upper tang screwâ€
http://www.gunuts.com/images/40.jpg
1. With the rifle still assembled, open the action and then remove the finger lever screw (#38 ).
2. Remove the finger lever. (#34)
3. Remove the breech bolt. (#3)
4. Remove the ejector. (#25)
5. Remove the Trigger guard plate support screw (#18 “upper tang screwâ€
- J Miller
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Please explain in simple one or two silabel words to this humble (???) mixed blood European-American (mostly Lithuanian Polish ) what the big deal is about this Wild West trigger.
What makes it the hot gizmo right now?
Thank You
Joe
What makes it the hot gizmo right now?
Thank You
Joe
***Be sneaky, get closer, bust the cap on him when you can put the ball where it counts
.***

Its just a trigger with a spring in it to take up the slop some folks take issue with from Marlin triggers. It must be polished better than the factory part I think to give the lower pull people say it does.
I like tinkering myself too much to spend the bucks for one so far. But I may end up with one some day. Just to see what the fuss is about.
So far a few minutes with a fine diamond stone on the factory sear has worked for me just fine.
I'm not dissing the product, too many people like it for it to be a sham. I just dont need it.
I like tinkering myself too much to spend the bucks for one so far. But I may end up with one some day. Just to see what the fuss is about.
So far a few minutes with a fine diamond stone on the factory sear has worked for me just fine.
I'm not dissing the product, too many people like it for it to be a sham. I just dont need it.

The WWG trigger was a big improvement on my Marlin 336 and 1894C.
I am not mechanically gifted and wouldn't have wanted to disassemble and reassemble these rifles without this guide (lots of photos). They can be downloaded. Midway has them and probably other mail-order companies do, too.
http://www.takedownguides.com/
I am not mechanically gifted and wouldn't have wanted to disassemble and reassemble these rifles without this guide (lots of photos). They can be downloaded. Midway has them and probably other mail-order companies do, too.
http://www.takedownguides.com/
Being naturally stubborn. I decided since it didn't work too well tearing apart one Marlin that I'd go ahead and tear apart the 444 and try it. Put trigger in and had it back together in 10 minutes. Trigger works great. Nice clean 2 1/2lb trigger.
Things I noticed right away, when taking the bottom tang off the 336 it seemed like everything wanted to spring apart a little. None of the screw holes wanted to line back up.
With the 444 everything came apart easily and the holes lined up a hell of a bunch easier. Go figure.
Now I'm going to get that 35 Rem back together. Still seems like the bolt is binding on something.
Things I noticed right away, when taking the bottom tang off the 336 it seemed like everything wanted to spring apart a little. None of the screw holes wanted to line back up.
With the 444 everything came apart easily and the holes lined up a hell of a bunch easier. Go figure.
Now I'm going to get that 35 Rem back together. Still seems like the bolt is binding on something.
Alot of times its muh easier to just start the trigger plate screws but not tighten them before trying the hammer screw. Lets things move around easier. Being slightly sprung isn't unusual.Wes wrote:Being naturally stubborn. I decided since it didn't work too well tearing apart one Marlin that I'd go ahead and tear apart the 444 and try it. Put trigger in and had it back together in 10 minutes. Trigger works great. Nice clean 2 1/2lb trigger.
Things I noticed right away, when taking the bottom tang off the 336 it seemed like everything wanted to spring apart a little. None of the screw holes wanted to line back up.
With the 444 everything came apart easily and the holes lined up a hell of a bunch easier. Go figure.
Now I'm going to get that 35 Rem back together. Still seems like the bolt is binding on something.
It should be easy to find what the bolts dragging on. Might be some stuff in the ejector groove. Try sliding it back & forth without the lever or ejector.